City University of New York: Difference between revisions

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{{Image|Cuny logo.gif|right|350px}}
{{Image|Cuny logo.gif|right|350px}}
The '''City University of New York''' ('''CUNY''') is a public university system that encompasses 23 institutions of higher education, including six community colleges, eleven four-year colleges, and five graduate and professional schools. Although CUNY is headquartered in Midtown [[Manhattan]], its colleges and schools are spread throughout [[New York City]]'s five boroughs.
The '''City University of New York''' ('''CUNY''') is a public university system that encompasses 23 institutions of higher education, including six community colleges, eleven four-year colleges, five graduate and professional schools, and the new cross-campus [[Macaulay Honors College]]. Although CUNY is headquartered in Midtown [[Manhattan]], its colleges and schools are spread throughout [[New York, New York|New York City]]'s five boroughs.


==History==
==History==


CUNY's history dates back to May 7, 1847, when New York State Governor John Young signed legislation authorizing New York City's Board of Education to create "a Free Academy" to provide free higher education for graduates of the city's primary and secondary public schools.
CUNY's history dates back to May 7, 1847, when New York State Governor [[John Young]] signed the Free Academy Act, which authorized New York City's Board of Education to create a free institution of higher education for graduates of the city's public schools. A month later, the city's voters decisively endorsed the initiative in a popular [[referendum]] and, shortly thereafter, the Board of Education itself resolved to establish the Free Academy and, under the leadership of [[Townsend Harris]], began planning its logistics. Over the next year-and-a-half, the Board selected [[Horace Webster]] to serve as the Academy's first president, appointed faculty members and designed a course of study, and oversaw the construction of a four-story school building, modeled after Cambridge University's King's College Chapel, on the southeast corner of Lexington Avenue and 23rd Street.
 
==Schools==
===Four-year colleges===
The CUNY system includes eleven four-year "senior" colleges, including four in Manhattan, three in Brooklyn, two in Queens, one in Staten Island, and one in the Bronx.
====Bernard M. Baruch College====
[[Baruch College]] originated in 1919 as the City College School of Civic and Business Administration. It was renamed for an 1889 alumnus of the College of the City of New York in 1958 and reorganized as a senior college within the CUNY system in 1968.
 
====Brooklyn College====
====City College of New York====
The [[City College of New York]] (CCNY) is CUNY's oldest institution.
====College of Staten Island====
====Hunter College====
[[Hunter College]], which is currently the largest of the CUNY colleges, was founded by [[Thomas H. Hunter]] in 1870 as the Normal College for Girls.
 
====John Jay College of Criminal Justice====
====Lehman College====
====Medgar Evers College====
====New York City College of Technology====
====Queens College====
====York College====
 
===Community colleges===
There are six community colleges within the CUNY system, including two in the Bronx, two in Queens, one in Manhattan, and one in Brooklyn.
====Borough of Manhattan Community College====
====Bronx Community College====
====Eugenia Maria de Hostos Community College====
====Kingsborough Community College====
====LaGuardia Community College====
====Queensborough Community College====
 
===Graduate and professional schools===
 
==References==
<references/>[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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Cuny logo.gif

The City University of New York (CUNY) is a public university system that encompasses 23 institutions of higher education, including six community colleges, eleven four-year colleges, five graduate and professional schools, and the new cross-campus Macaulay Honors College. Although CUNY is headquartered in Midtown Manhattan, its colleges and schools are spread throughout New York City's five boroughs.

History

CUNY's history dates back to May 7, 1847, when New York State Governor John Young signed the Free Academy Act, which authorized New York City's Board of Education to create a free institution of higher education for graduates of the city's public schools. A month later, the city's voters decisively endorsed the initiative in a popular referendum and, shortly thereafter, the Board of Education itself resolved to establish the Free Academy and, under the leadership of Townsend Harris, began planning its logistics. Over the next year-and-a-half, the Board selected Horace Webster to serve as the Academy's first president, appointed faculty members and designed a course of study, and oversaw the construction of a four-story school building, modeled after Cambridge University's King's College Chapel, on the southeast corner of Lexington Avenue and 23rd Street.

Schools

Four-year colleges

The CUNY system includes eleven four-year "senior" colleges, including four in Manhattan, three in Brooklyn, two in Queens, one in Staten Island, and one in the Bronx.

Bernard M. Baruch College

Baruch College originated in 1919 as the City College School of Civic and Business Administration. It was renamed for an 1889 alumnus of the College of the City of New York in 1958 and reorganized as a senior college within the CUNY system in 1968.

Brooklyn College

City College of New York

The City College of New York (CCNY) is CUNY's oldest institution.

College of Staten Island

Hunter College

Hunter College, which is currently the largest of the CUNY colleges, was founded by Thomas H. Hunter in 1870 as the Normal College for Girls.

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

Lehman College

Medgar Evers College

New York City College of Technology

Queens College

York College

Community colleges

There are six community colleges within the CUNY system, including two in the Bronx, two in Queens, one in Manhattan, and one in Brooklyn.

Borough of Manhattan Community College

Bronx Community College

Eugenia Maria de Hostos Community College

Kingsborough Community College

LaGuardia Community College

Queensborough Community College

Graduate and professional schools

References